Cats win one, lose one on Friday

Friday, July 31, 2009

ORLANDO, FL — The Wildcats fought their way out of a 20-point hole to pull within 4 points in the second and third quarters, but never could get over the hump in a 63-51 loss to the Minutemen White (New York).

The Cats rebound in the second game of the day in a must-win situation to grab a 80-52 victory over the GT Stars (Atlanta) to stay alive in tournament play.

North Mississippi will take on a familiar foe in the Roundballers (Louisiana) Saturday at 10:00 a.m. — a win and the Cats play again at 2:30 p.m. Both games will take place at the Milk House at Disney’s Wide World of Sports.

New York   16  12  22  13   63
North MS   12     9  19  11   51

NMS — Trevor Boren 16, Josh Green 15, Zach Carnell 10, Caleb Van Tassell 5, Reed Clayton 3, Austin Harrelson 2
NY — Josh Hargrove 18, Remy Pinson 16, Jonathan Pozo 11

North MS  17  13  30  20   80
Atlanta        9  13  15  16   53

NMS — Caleb Van Tassell 13, Andrew Bell 12, Brandon Blake 11, Josh Green 10, Trevor Boren 8, Zach Carnell 8, Charlie Easley 7, Reed Clayton 6, Austin Harrelson 3, Zavion Adams 2

ATL — Jamil Saaka 12


Wildcats win fourth straight, advance to Sweet 16

Thursday, July 30, 2009

ORLANDO, FL — The North Mississippi Wildcats survived a physical and intense battle with the PT Cruisers (South Carolina) to pick up a 63-48 win earning them a spot in the Sweet 16 of the 17U AAU National Championship Tournament.

The Cruisers took an early 13-10 lead in the first quarter and clawed their way out to a 30-27 lead by halftime, but the Wildcats refused to lose and owned the second half of the game.

The Cats outscored South Carolina 16-8 in the third quarter to take 43-38 advantage before sinking 11-of-14 from the free throw line in the final frame to pull away for the 15-point victory.

Zach Carnell (Ingomar) and Josh Green (Pontotoc) led the Cats with 20 points each. Reed Clayton (Tupelo) added 7, Trevor Boren (Saltillo) 5, Zavion Adams (Hickory Flat) 5, Charlie Easley (Calhoun City) 2, Austin Harrelson (Tupelo) 2, Brandon Blake (Oxford) and Caleb Van Tassell added one point each.

D’Andre Draper scored 13 while Issac Williamson added 11 points for the Cruisers.

The win marks the fourth-straight victory for the Wildcats since dropping their first game of the week and puts them into the tournament’s Sweet 16 against the Minutemen White (New York) Friday at 10:00 a.m.

NMS  10  17  16  20 –  63
SC       13  17    8  10  –  48


Lighthouse finishes 8th in National Championship Tourney

Thursday, July 30, 2009

ORLANDO, FL — Coach Gary Caveness and “Da House” Lighthouse (Corinth) will be bringing home a little extra hardware from the AAU 16U Division I National Championship Tournament held at Disney’s Wide World of Sports this week in Florida.

Corinth defeated the Goon Squad (Ft Lauderdale, Florida) 79-68 to finish in eight place in the tournament.

Players were presented with medallions and surrounded Coach Caveness as he hoisted the team trophy in celebration of their victory.

Da House consist of players from all across Northeast Mississippi: Christopher Brooks (Tupelo), Kareem Brown (New Albany), Marques Conway (Okolona), Deonta Ewing (Tupelo), David Gardner (Okolona), Jaylen Gaston (Saltillo), Deonta Herman (Corinth), Tariq Lockhart (Home School), Jaylon Moore (Olive Branch), Steven Polk (Corinth), Acie Vance (Ripley), Desmond Walker (formerly with Tupelo), Earnest Williams (Aberdeen), Jordan Wyke (Alcorn Central).

Ole Miss head coach Andy Kennedy was spotted taking in some of the Lighthouse game from courtside.


Wildcats down Gold to advance in winners bracket

Thursday, July 30, 2009

ORLANDO, FL — The North Mississippi Wildcats advanced to the second round of the winners bracket of the 17U AAU National Tournament with a 72-63 win over Connecticut Gold today at Disney’s Wide World of Sports’ Josten’s Center.

Brandon Blake (Oxford) continued his stellar play with scoring 16 points, 14 in the fourth quarter, 8 rebounds and 4 assist.

Andrew Bell (Pontotoc) scored 12 while his high school teammate Josh Green and Caleb Van Tassell (Hickory Flat) added 10 points each for the Cats. Reed Clayton (Tupelo) 7, Austin Harrelson (Tupelo) 5, Griffin McCormick (Pontotoc) 3, Zavion Adams  (Hickory Flat) 3, Trevor Boren (Saltillo) and Zach Carnell (Ingomar) added two each.

The Cat’s picked up the defensive intensity as they held Connecticut well under their 78 points per game average during Pool Play this week.

Riley Kirsch led the Gold with 16 points. Justin Kuntz and Matt Conway added 13 points each.

North Mississippi will play in the second round of the winners bracket against the PT Cruisers (South Carolina) today at 5 p.m. — 4 p.m. Mississippi time.

The opening round win guarantees the team a game on Friday while a win tonight will put the Cats into the tournament’s Sweet Sixteen.

NMS   16  19  16  21    72
CG       14   9  17  23    63

NMS — Brandon Blake 16, Andrew Bell 12, Josh Green 10, Caleb Van Tassell 10, Reed Clayton 7, Austin Harrelson 5, Griffin McCormick 3, Zavion Adams 3, Trevor Boren 2, Zach Carnell 2.

CG — Riley Kirsch 16, Justin Kuntz 13, Matt Conway 13, Wesley Scott Clark 9, William Cardarelli 5, Spencer Calling 4, Seamus Ward 2, Sean Dempsey 1.


Wildcats win two-straight, earn second seed in National Tourney

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

ORLANDO, FL — The North Mississippi Wildcats picked up a 57-48 win over Orange Park (Florida) on Tuesday and a 67-52 win over Academic Basketball (Connecticut) on Wednesday to with a 2-1 record in Pool Play.

North MS 57 Orange Park 48

The Cats dropped a disappointing 65-55 loss to RBS 17 (Illinois) to open up Pool play, but rebounded nicely in a 57-48 win over Orange County at the Josten’s Center at Disney’s Wide World of Sports on Tuesday.

Josh Green (Pontotoc) scored 14 points while Brandon Blake (Oxford) added 13 points and grabbed 12 rebounds in the win. Andrew Bell (Pontotoc) and Zach Carnell (Ingomar) added 7 points each, Reed Clayton (Tupelo) 6, Griffin McCormick (Pontotoc) 5, Charlie Easley (Calhoun City) and Trevor Boren (Saltillo) scored 2 each while Zavion Adams (Hickory Flat) added one in the win.

North MS 67 Academic Basketball 52

The Wildcats were faced with a must-win situation against Academic Basketball at Foundation Academy on Wednesday while a win by 15 points or better would boost their chances of making the National Championship Tournament.

The Cats took care of business hitting the 15-point margin of victory right on the mark.

Bell led the way with 18 points, Boren 10, Carnell 9, Clayton 7, Blake 6, Green 6, Austin Harrelson (Tupelo) 4, Caleb VanTassell (Hickory Flat) 4, and Adams added 3 in a win that saw their opponents hit with five technical fouls along with a player and coach ejection.

RBS 17 defeated Orange Park to claim the Pool Championship and the Wildcats finished in second place advancing to the double-elimination National Championship Tournament which starts Thursday with times and location to be announced later today.

Monday

North MS    14  13    9  19  55
RBS 17    14  13  12  26  65

NMS — Josh Green 11, Caleb VanTassell 10, Brandon Blake 10, Griffin McCormick 8, Zach Carnell 7, Andrew Bell 3, Charlie Easley 2, Trevor Boren 2,  Zavion Adams 2.

RBS — Kevin Schlitter 14, Dennis Hodges 12, Tyler Les 12, Ryan Walker 10.

Tuesday

North MS    15  12  19  11   57
Orange Park    13    6  20    9  48

NMS — Josh Green 14, Brandon Blake 13, Andrew Bell 7, Zach Carnell 7,  Reed Clayton 6, Griffin McCormick 5, Charlie Easley 2, Trevor Boren 2, Zavion Adams 1.

OP — Matt Clark 17, George Antonio 13.

Wednesday

North MS     14  19  12  25   67
ABC           3  11  21  27   52

North MS — Andrew Bell 18, Trevor Boren 10, Zach Carnell 9, Reed Clayton 7, Brandon Blake 6, Josh Green 6, Austin Harrelson (Tupelo) 4, Caleb VanTassell 4, and Zavion Adams 3.

ABC — Laurent Firlotte 22, Takari Smalls 10.


16U AAU stars rep’n Mississippi well in Florida

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

ORLANDO, FL — Mississippi has been well represented in the Division I 16U AAU National Championship Tournament this week at Disney’s Wide World of Sports as “Da House” Lighthouse (Corinth), Jackson Tigers and Southern Phenoms (Meridian) each won their Pool Championship and earned a spot into the National Championship tournament this week.

The Lighthouse won their Pool with 53-44 win over the Triad Trailblazers (North Carolina) on Saturday, a 90-88 overtime win over the Peoria Irish (Illinois) on Sunday and wrapped up the Pool Championship with a 71-68 win over the Lou Will Stars (Georgia) on Monday.

The Tigers rolled over the competition in their Pool downing Heart and Hustle (Florida) 61-41 on Saturday, thumping Salisbury/Rowan Kings (North Carolina) 74-38 and taking care of Team Magic (Massachusetts) 55-29 on Monday to claim their Pool Championship.

The Phenoms won their first game of Pool play via forfeit before dominating the rest of their Pool with a 74-46 win over Hoopdreamz Basketball (Middle Atlantic) on Sunday and a 79-40 win over S.C. Rising Stars (South Carolina) also on Monday.

Each team entered today’s Championship Tournament as number one seeds.

Updates will be made when they become available as tournament play advances throughout the day.


ASU’s Carrington Playing for More than Glory

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Todd Traub/Special to the Arkansas State Athletic Department

Sometimes it is the littlest blocker that wears out Alex Carrington the most.

Carrington, Arkansas State’s senior defensive end, enters fall camp as the Sun Belt Conference preseason defensive player of the year and is projected as a first-day NFL draft pick, possibly a first-rounder, in April.

However, despite Carrington’s 6-5, 285-pound frame and fearsome ability that have pro scouts drooling, there is a certain little rough-houser who can lay Carrington low during unguarded moments.

“If I’m trying to rest or something, he ain’t going for that,” Carrington said of his 4-year-old son Khalil. “He’ll just run over there and jump on me. We wrestle a lot, all the time, man. We wrestle all the time.”

As a single father, Carrington has had his hands full the past four years, more so than many college football players. Yet he holds a better than 3.0 GPA in psychology and is on course to graduate in December, after which NFL teams will be lining up to claim him early in the draft next spring.

“Eight months away, my dream is finally here,” Carrington said. “But I’ve got to realize that I do still have a job here at A-State and that kind of helps keep me focused. Because that last season can make or break you, you know? I just continue to do what I do and play my game.”

College has been a sometimes-wearying experience, but if not for Khalil, Carrington said, he might not be about to fulfill his NFL dream.

“I thank God for my son because he’s what got me here,” Carrington said. “It puts you in a different light. It puts you in a different mind frame that you’ve got this mouth to feed. This life is in your hands. Having that kind of duty as a father, it’s a big-time motivator, to go ahead and get that extra rep in and get that extra sprint in, go ahead and work hard while you’ve got the chance.”

Though they aren’t a couple, Carrington and Khalil’s mother are friendly, and Khalil will sometimes stay with her or Carrington’s parents in his hometown of Tupelo, Miss., where Carrington was an all-region selection in high school and recorded 84 tackles, 6 sacks and forced 3 fumbles his senior year.

But Carrington keeps Khalil with him as much as possible, and Khalil may start kindergarten under Carrington’s watch in Jonesboro this fall. That’s fine with Carrington, who was drawn to Arkansas State partially because he sensed a family environment among the players and coaches.

It was that, and the pursuit of his degree, that kept Carrington from entering the draft after last season, when he posted 10.5 sacks and was named the Sun Belt’s defensive player of the year.

“First of all my degree, I finish up in December,” Carrington said. “Another thing is, I wanted to finish out here, my senior year at A-State. I love this place, I’m glad I came here. You only get a few chances to play college football. Not everybody gets that kind of chance. I love this sport man, I know I’m going to miss it once it’s gone and I wanted to get as much as I could out of it.”

So far, he has. Carrington enters 2009 touted in numerous preseason magazines after he bulldozed his way through the Sun Belt last year. He was a sack short of the conference record and tied for 14th in the nation in the category and was seventh nationally with an average 1.58 tackles for loss per game.

Carrington was the first defensive lineman to win the Sun Belt postseason honor since Middle Tennessee’s Jeff Littlejohn in 2005 and only the fourth to win the honor all time.

“He has all the things that you look for from a character standpoint and from a talent and physical standpoint,” Red Wolves Coach Steve Roberts said. “He’s got great size, just over 6-5, 280 pounds. He ran a 4.71 for the pro scouts, which they typically time very stringently. He’s got a great burst off the ball.”

Carrington said he has always had NFL dreams, and as he spoke he sat on a plush sofa in the football complex recruiting room, which is ringed at the top by paintings of NFL helmets under which are posted the names of the Arkansas State players to make the next level.

The list includes recent draft picks like tight end David Johnson (Pittsburgh in 2009) and Tyrell Johnson, the all-Sun Belt safety who went to Minnesota in the second round of  2008, making him Arkansas State’s highest pick since Bill Bergey went to Cincinnati in the second round in 1968.

Clearly things have worked out for Carrington, who has a chance to go even higher, but despite the NFL products, Arkansas State is no USC. So why did he pick Jonesboro?

The answer lies in a little scouting project Carrington undertook after his recruiting visit.

Carrington’s host was defensive back Khayyam Burns, who would wind up among the Sun Belt’s all-time leading tacklers, just behind Tyrell Johnson, and would sign a free agent deal with the Kansas City Chiefs in 2008. Burns told Carrington that Arkansas State was turning the corner as a program, and it would prove it by winning the 2005 Sun Belt title, but as Carrington read up on his fellow recruits, he started thinking further into the future.

Carrington saw Little Rock McClellan running back Reggie Arnold, now poised to become the eighth NCAA player to rush for 1,000 yards four straight years. He saw Covington (La.) High School quarterback Corey Leonard, now set to become Arkansas State’s all-time leader in passing yards and touchdowns, and Carrington saw Mountain Home safety Evan Van Dolah, now coming off a career year in which he had 52 tackles, 1 interception and 4 breakups.

“I went home after my recruiting visit bragging about people, man. … I was in awe,” Carrington said. “I was picturing stuff in my head, winning titles, and then my freshman year we won the Sun Belt Conference. That was real big. And just building off that. We’ve had other chances to win and we didn’t get it done, but the hope is still there.”

So Carrington will spend one more year trying to win a championship with the Red Wolves, and he will fill his free time with his son, watching “Sponge Bob Square Pants,” playing catch and, of course, wrestling.

And if his days ever get too full, if he just feels tuckered out, all Carrington has to do is remember the good life he has worked for is just around the corner.

“It’s times like that, man, where I go to scripture,” Carrington said. “And I look at things and I say to myself  ‘There’s somebody that has it a lot worse than I do.’ I’ve got to keep on pushing. One thing my parents taught me is going through tough stuff will make you a stronger and better person.”


Wildcats struggle in AAU National opener

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

The North MS Wildcats (Pontotoc) hit the court bright and early for an 8:00 a.m. tip-off at Windemere Prep High School, home of the WPHS Lakers, to take on RBS 17 (Illinois) in their opening game of the AAU National Championship Tournament.

As expected, both teams struggled in the early goings of the contest, but the tide turned the way of the RBS when a shot after at the horn was ruled good to complete a 9-0 run to close out the first half and tie the game at 27 at the break.

RBS took advantage of a sloppy third quarter by the Wildcats to grab a 39-36 lead at the end of the third.

The Cats switched to a 1-3-1 defense that quickly resulted in turnovers, easy baskets and four-point edge midway through the final frame.  The shots stopped falling for the Cats late in the contest allowing a hot-shooting RBS squad to build a five-point lead and make seven of their final eight free throws attempts to pick up a 65-55 victory.

Brandon Blake (Oxford) led the Cats with 10 points and 12 rebounds.

Up next for the Wildcats will be the NFBC Orange Park Suns (Florida) tonight at 9:20 p.m. at the Jostens Center at Disney’s Wide World of Sports.  The Suns defeated the Academic Basketball Club (Connecticut) 56-48 to open their Pool Play on Monday.

The Cats will wrap up Pool Play on Wendesday at 11:20 a.m. against ABC at Foundation Academy.

The top two teams from each brackett advances to the Championship Tournament while the bottom two teams will play for the Classic Championship starting on Thursday.


Day 2: ALB State Tournament Updates

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Tupelo eliminates the Booneville Braves with a 16-6 win in 7 innings, Austin Burns gets the win for the 49er’s.

The error-prone Braves committed 5 errors in today’s season-ending loss, duplicating the same amount of mistakes in yesterday’s 11-0 loss to the Pontotoc Red Sox.

Tupelo will be faced with another elimination game later tonight as they await the loser between Pontotoc and Hattiesburg.  Tupelo dropped a 5-3 decision to Hub City in last night’s late game and split their series with the Red Sox during the regular season.

The winner between Pontotoc and Hub City will advance to Sunday’s championship series where they will have to lose two games before being eliminated from the tournament.


NEMS360: Bombers handcuff host 49er’s

Saturday, July 25, 2009

TUPELO – The second game of the 2009 American Legion Baseball State Tournament featured another strong pitching performance, this time from both teams’ starters.

Although not a perfect outing, Matthew Magee followed up Pontotoc starter Dylan Earnest’s perfect game in Game 1 with a strong effort, as his Hub City Bombers beat the defending state champion Tupelo 49ers 5-3 at Tupelo’s Golden Wave Field on Friday night.

Magee held the 49ers to just three runs in 71⁄3 innings of work to help his team advance to today’s >>> click here to read more from John Wilbert.